Your drip-feeds will be "trickle vents". Excellent they are too. You may not need to open the window with them fitted.
Even converting damp, old barns, I've never fitted air vents for damp and condensation control. (Except, by law, for open fires, w/burners etc)
Holes in the wall (vents) are just considered unacceptable today. People eventually just get fed up with the draught, and bung them up.
I'm always going on about "Passive Stack Ventilation" which takes stale, condensate-laden air up to the roofspace and away........... through some simple ducting. It doesn't have to be that complicated. Just something along those lines. Common sense really.
If your house has trickle vents and bags of insulation ...... AND, most important of all ........... extraction at all points where vapour is likely (kitchen, bath, utility room etc) then there should be no future problems. It all rather depends on how they've gone about insulating and damp-controlling the building. I have to say, in my experience, if they have to consider leaving holes in the walls, then perhaps they're not quite so confident in their system.