The design and construction of switchable materials attracts tremendous interest owing to the potential in information storing and processing or molecular sensing. [1][2][3][4] The archetypal examples involve a diversity of Fe II -, [5,6] Fe III - [7] or Co IIbased [8][9][10] spin-crossover (SCO) compounds, Co III/II -catecholate/semiquinone systems, [1,11] as well as d-d bimetallic and sd-d trimetallic cyanide-bridged systems revealing chargetransfer-induced spin transitions (CTIST). [12][13][14][15][16][17][18] Some of these compounds, for example Prussian blue analogues, are particularly promising from the point of view of photoswitching between nonmagnetic and magnetized (that is, T B , T C ) states, owing to magnetic coupling through molecular bridges in discrete species [14,15] and extended networks. [17,18] Such bistability also emerged in the magnetochemistry of octacyanidometalates, exploiting metal-to-metal electron transfer in HS Co II L[W V (CN) 8 ] 3À (L = pyrimidine, 4-methylpyridine) [19,20] or canonical SCO in Fe II L[Nb IV (CN) 8 ] 4À extended networks [21] (L = 4-pyridinealdoxime). A magnetic hysteresis loop with a coercivity of 1-3 T were observed in an optically excited low-temperature metastable phase.