Finally, there’s an address.

Gwendolyn Primous’s nonprofit organization, Dome of Hope, will hold an open house from 1-4 p.m. Saturday at its facility at 914 N. Center St., at the corner of Poplar.

It has taken 20 years for Primous to find a permanent location for the organization she’s been thinking about since 1998, but in truth, her Dome of Hope dream was 56 years in the making.

That’s because it took a lifetime of experience — dropping out of high school when her father died, being raped at 19 and becoming a single mom, giving up a job with the county to care for her mother for 11 years, then returning to school and earning a degree at 50, finding herself homeless and living out of her car until it was repossessed — to figure out what the Dome of Hope should be.

She’s settled on Etta — named for her late mother, Etta Mae Ford — which stands for Education, Technology, Trade and Arts.