The interesting transport and magnetic properties in manganites depend sensitively on the nucleation and growth of electronic phase-separated domains. By fabricating antidot arrays in La 0.325 Pr 0.3 Ca 0.375 MnO 3 (LPCMO) epitaxial thin films, we create ordered arrays of micrometer-sized ferromagnetic metallic (FMM) rings in the LPCMO films that lead to dramatically increased metal-insulator transition temperatures and reduced resistances. The FMM rings emerge from the edges of the antidots where the lattice symmetry is broken. Based on our Monte Carlo simulation, these FMM rings assist the nucleation and growth of FMM phase domains increasing the metal-insulator transition with decreasing temperature or increasing magnetic field. This study points to a way in which electronic phase separation in manganites can be artificially controlled without changing chemical composition or applying external field.manganites | metal-insulator transition | electronic phase separation | antidot | magnetization E lectronic phase separation (EPS) is a striking phenomenon that commonly occurs in strongly correlated materials such as highTc oxides and colossal magnetoresistive (CMR) manganites (1, 2). Because EPS originates from strong coupling between spin, charge, orbital, and lattice, studies of EPS may reveal the fundamentals of strong electronic interactions in complex oxides (3, 4). Moreover, physical properties of complex oxides often depend sensitively on the details of EPS domains, including their size, density, and growth kinetics upon changing physical parameters. Therefore, a great effort has been devoted to study the EPS phenomena and engineer the domains in complex oxides (5, 6).With the help of real-space imaging methods, the size of EPS domains of oxide films has been shown to range from ∼10 nm to a few hundred nanometers, depending on the material (7,8). The spatial distribution of the EPS domains is often random, and their shape can be tuned by external strain (9, 10) or the symmetry of substrates (11). Recently, it has been shown that the nucleation and growth of EPS domains in manganites are controllable by applying local external fields (magnetic or electric) (12, 13). What has not been explored is the effect of ordered arrays of artificially structured domains on EPS.In this work, we show that ordered arrays of EPS domains can be created with controllable size, shape, and density in La 0.325 Pr 0.3-Ca 0.375 MnO 3 (LPCMO), a prototypical CMR material. Specifically, we fabricate patterned arrays of holes, often referred to as negative dots or "antidots," (14-16) in the epitaxial LPCMO thin films. Ferromagnetic metallic (FMM) rings were observed surrounding the edges of the antidots, which is consistent with the recent discovery of FMM edge state in manganite strips (17). The magnetic measurements indicate that the magnetization of these rings is ∼16% higher than that of the film. With the increase of antidot density, the LPCMO thin films exhibit considerably higher metalinsulator transition (MIT) temperature a...