I have read through this
thread https://permies.com/t/44483/Breathing-Walls-George-Swanson-Oram regarding keeping buildings breathable.
We live in a temperate rain forest more or less, with a long winter. "From December 1925 to April 2023, the average 12-month total precipitation was 61.7 inches" "From December 1925 to April 2023, the 12-month average temperature was 32.7°F" (National Centers of Environmental Information).
Many of the natural building methods I have read about on permies seem (at least on the surface) to be most suited to more arid environments (like Montana). In those environments, keeping things dry, and drying out a wet building is relatively simple. But when everything in the environment is damp most all of the time... then what?
The only info I have found on historical building methods for my particular area is the Barabara, which is basically a variation of a pit house (this takes great advantage of thermal mass, but I have a hard time imagining the building to be very dry), and later the log buildings. From what I have gathered, the Barabaras did not often last very long, and didn't need to since the people living in them were relatively nomadic and they were simple to construct. The log buildings have a longer life span, but rot can still be a hazard.
So. How do we construct healthy buildings that breathe in very wet environments?
Any permies out there with ideas,
experience, research on this topic?