One‐pot reactions of the catechol‐scaffolding aroylbis(N,N‐diethylthiourea) H2Lcat with mixtures of alkaline earth nitrates M(NO3)2 (M2+ = Ca2+, Sr2+ or Ba2+) and (NEt4)[AuCl4] or [Au(tht)Cl] (tht = tetrahydrothiophene) in methanol in the presence of Et3N as supporting base give rise to neutral trinuclear gold(I) {2}‐metallacoronates with the composition of {M ⊂ [Au2(Lcat)2]} (1). Similar reactions with the pyridine‐centered aroylbis(N,N‐diethylthiourea) H2Lpy, however, produce complexes with the same metal‐to‐ligand ratio but with higher nuclearity {2M ⊂ [Au4(Lpy)4]} (2). In both 1 and 2, Au(I) ions are exclusively S‐bonded with the organic ligands and adopt a virtually linear coordination fashion. Such metal‐ligand binding is responsible for the formation of metallacoronands, which accommodate alkaline earth metal ions in their molecular voids, thereby resulting in host–guest coordination assemblies. The level of metal‐ligand aggregation in the resulting assemblies is dependent on the denticity, size and flexibility of the centered building block of the aroylbis(N,N‐diethylthiourea) ligands.