The IICRC WRT body of knowledge identifiesrelative humidity at or above approximately 70%as presenting the greatest risk for structural and microbial damage to hygroscopic materials. At this level, many materials readily absorb moisture from the air, increasing moisture content even without direct liquid water contact.
The WRT manual explains that hygroscopic materials such as wood, paper, drywall, and textiles reach higher equilibrium moisture contents as RH increases. When RH exceeds safe thresholds, these materials may swell, deform, lose structural integrity, or support microbial growth.
Microbial amplification risk also increases significantly at higher RH levels. While mold growth depends on multiple factors, sustained RH above approximately 60–70% greatly increases the likelihood of microbial activity on organic materials.
This is why restorers are trained to aggressively control humidity during drying and to monitor RH as part of daily documentation. Maintaining RH well below damaging thresholds protects unaffected materials and limits secondary damage during the restoration process.
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