Abstract Autophagy is a conserved intracellular degradation pathway that uses de novo doublemembrane vesicle (autophagosome) formation to target a wide range of cytoplasmic material for lysosomal degradation. In multicellular organisms, autophagy initiation requires the timely assembly of a contact site between the ER and the nascent autophagosome. Here, we report the in vitro reconstitution of a full-length sevensubunit human autophagy initiation supercomplex and found at its core ATG13-101 and transmembrane protein ATG9. Assembly of this core complex requires the rare ability of ATG13 and ATG101 to adopt topologically distinct folds. The slow spontaneous conversion between folds creates a rate-limiting step to regulate selfassembly of the super-complex. The interaction of the core complex with ATG2-WIPI4 enhances tethering of membrane vesicles and accelerates lipid transfer of ATG2 by both ATG9 and ATG13-101. Our work uncovers the molecular basis of the contact site and its assembly mechanisms imposed by the metamorphosis of ATG13-101 to regulate autophagosome biogenesis in space and time.