I read someone (Andre?) mention that they tilted the grip section of North Road bars down thirty degrees from horizontal
Yes, that's me, and on this forum, so searchable. I will shortly have to go shower and change into a pink shirt and a blazer so I can take my wife to lunch, so I'll just give you the headlines.
The ergonomic purpose of handlebars, which you break at your own longterm risk of repetitive stress injury, is simply to hold your wrists straight under most dynamic operations. That's why experienced cyclists on drop bars often hold the upper straight section of the bars, not ideal but better than the unergonomic horizontal actual grips.
North Road bars fitted incompetently with the grips horizontal, i.e. parallel to the ground, will bend your wrist unnaturally unless they're about level with the fork crown. North Road Bars fitted upside down on short top tube bikes make excellent moustache bars and is another option to match your reach on an existing bike to your desire for straight wrists.
Essentially there are only two correct ways to fit North Road Bars. The first is the way I do it, with the handgrips turned downwards. The 30 degrees isn't set in marble. It depends on the top tube length, stem length and your desired back angle, so that when your wrists are straight with you in your desired riding position, you've finished adjusting.
Two more things are very important in your choice of North Road Bars. The handgrips should be for their entire length outside your shoulder width, and the length of the handgrips should be the maximum you can find because of the number of controls you want under your thumb on a modern bike. My preferred North Road Bar width is 620mm, but I'm a large guy who sits very upright on my bike, so most cyclists will probably be happy with something in the order of 600mm.
Good luck.