L-Train, we have a humidity problem in our basement, and solved in in a unique way. I never gets "wet" down there (aside from the water line, which used to condense water). When I started working on bench work, as it's winter, I would get cold toes, so rather then put carpet down (since I'm working on the layout, the carpet would probably be ruined rather quickly) I put down some cardboard. As the cardboard gets soiled, I replace it.
Here is the weird part, the pipes don't condense water, and the thermometer I have down there has a humidity sensor, which currently shows 35% Relative humidity, whereas before it showed 50+. The only thing different is the cardboard. BTW, if I run the wood stove in the basement, the humidity drops to 20%. Because it's a basement, the temperature is pretty constant, and that helps.
As Andrew and Fred have mentioned, if you have water down there, get it taken care of, as your layout is going to be the least of your concerns. Our old house had such a problem, and we ended up replacing all the subflooring on the main level of the house because of rot, the humidity in that basement never dropped below 70%, and was the cause of our floors rotting, Falling through a floor with a basement underneath was a bad thing!
