@statmanGenerally we think of center points as being relevant to only continuous factors as you point out. But one can create a design which has continuous AND categorical factors AND center points. The usual convention, if you have the budget and resources, is to add treatment combinations to the experiment such that each center point combination of continuous factors is run at least twice for EACH level of the continuous factors. This arrangement maintains balance and estimation of all possible effects if running say a full factorial design...but as one finds out pretty quickly, the size of the design balloons pretty quickly.
A more prudent, economical and efficient approach would almost always be take advantage of optimal design techniques and build out the design to fit the problem vs. the method I cite above....which basically shoe horns the problem into the design because, 'well it's in the Classic catalog as the only way to do it'.