Suprastructures at the colloidal scale must be assembled with precise control over local interactions to accurately mimic biological complexes. The toughest design requirements include breaking the symmetry of assembly in a simple and reversible fashion, to unlock functions and properties so far limited to living matter. We demonstrate a simple experimental technique to program magnetic-field-induced interactions between metallodielectric patchy particles and isotropic, non-magnetic âsatelliteâ particles. By controlling the connectivity, composition and distribution of building blocks, we show the assembly of three-dimensional, multi-component supraparticles which can dynamically reconfigure in response to change in external field strength. The local arrangement of building blocks and their reconfigurability is governed by a balance of attraction and repulsion between oppositely polarized domains, which we illustrate theoretically and tune experimentally. The assembled supraparticles are stabilized and recovered via photo-chemical manipulation of electrostatic interactions, using a photo-acid generator. Tunable, bulk assembly of colloidal matter with predefined symmetry provides a platform to design functional microstructured materials with pre-programmable physical and chemical properties.