All cyanobacteria and some chemoautotrophic bacteria fix CO2 into sugars using specialized proteinaceous compartments called carboxysomes. Carboxysomes enclose the enzymes Rubisco and carbonic anhydrase inside a layer of shell proteins to increase the CO2 concentration for efficient carbon fixation by Rubisco. In the ⍺-carboxysome lineage, a disordered and highly repetitive protein named CsoS2 is essential for carboxysome formation and function. Without it, the bacteria require high CO2 to grow. How does a protein predicted to be lacking structure serve as the architectural scaffold for such a vital cellular compartment? In this study, we identify key residues present in the repeats of CsoS2, VTG and Y, which are necessary for building functional ⍺-carboxysomes in vivo. These highly conserved and repetitive residues contribute to the multivalent binding interaction and phase separation behavior between CsoS2 and shell proteins. We also demonstrate 3-component reconstitution of CsoS2, Rubisco, and shell proteins into spherical condensates, and show the utility of reconstitution as a biochemical tool to study carboxysome biogenesis. The precise self-assembly of thousands of proteins is crucial for carboxysome formation, and understanding this process could enable their use in alternative biological hosts or industrial processes as effective tools to fix carbon.