Bird,
When I designed the house I made sure that every major room had at least one window that was 6 feet tall and 8 feet wide. Now each "window" has two openable windows.

They are casements so there are two windows that open for every four feet of window. So the 8 foot window really has four panels that open up. I know that is confusing.

But the casements are close very tightly and you can open them up to scoop the wind even if the wind is blowing paralell to the wndow.
We ended up putting in 10' ceilings in the house. This was driven by the window size. The way we placed the windows meant that the top of the windows are 8 feet above the floor. So that meant a 9' or 10' ceiling. And since the top of the windows are at 8' feet we ended up putting in 8' tall doors. I hate small door openings so every door is 36inch wide.
Well I got off on a tangent with the doors but the tall ceiling open the place up and gets back to the old Southern design of having tall ceilings to get the heat up and away from people. I really wanted to put in a belvidere to open up and allow the heat to flow in the windows and then up and out of the house. But we ran out of money.
We did put in a somewhat quiet whole house attic fan that we run to dump heat out of the house. Sometimes the house will heat up when we are not there so we open up the windows and turn on the fan. It just sucks the heat out and will drop the humidity and heat within 20-30 minutes. We just turn it off. And we have good ceiling fans that help a bit as well.
At night once the outside temp gets to 80 or below we open up the house. By morning the house temp is anywhere from 74 to 77 degrees depending on how cool it was during the night. We close up the windows when we leave for work or if home wait until the outside temps start to rise. The house seems to stay about 5-9 degrees cooler than the outside temp. And it takes until 2:00-3:00 before it gets to 80ish when the outside temps start to get above 90. If the temps stay in the 80s it seems like the house stays cool until night fall when we repeat the cycle.
Our electric bill was 85-90 dollars last month. The highest we have seen I think was 135 for AC. Maybe we hit 153 but I think that was a heating bill. We put alot of insulation into the house and it seems well worth it. Our exterior walls are 12 inches thick, 2x6 walls, 1 inch of ridgid insulation, and air gap and then brick. Our floor is finished colored concrete which has lots of mass and helps regulate the temperature. By cool soaking at night it just takes that much longer to heat up. Course if it gets hot it takes that much longer to cool down. Good in winter bad in summer.
We built the house to be comfortable at low cost and for us its working. Its 2425 sf and pretty danged cheap to run. I figure we spend 30ish dollars on hot water generation and another 30ish to wash clothes. The rest is the fridge/freezer, lights, stove, etc.
Later,
Dan