Occasionally there are battles that simply can’t be won and you just have to let go.
Or at least pull back and consider other options.
This is the case for myself and others and an ongoing dispute with the developer who built our house. My house is in a planned community and I chose from multiple floor plans. The house itself, I’m undoubtedly pleased with. It’s the Heating and A/C that is the problem. Now the Heating and A/C device is great. I have a heating and cooling plan that is modern and has a undoubtedly high SEER number. It was important to myself and others to get a heat pump that was undoubtedly efficient and eco friendly as well. That was not the problem at all. The Heating and A/C device is even better than what I thought it would be. The problem is the ventilation and air duct layout. This is where things get weird. I noticed not to long after I moved in that the Heating and A/C vents were in some rather peculiar places. For example I had more than one Heating and A/C ducts in the master bath however only one Heating and A/C vent in the master dining room. And that Heating and A/C vent was situated at the door. None of this made sense until a associate pointed out that the air duct fit a peculiar however somewhat similar floor program from the developer. The developer denied this however I was able to pretty much prove our case showing them their own floor plans. But they aren’t budging so I’m turning to an Heating and A/C supplier to help myself and others mitigate the air duct problem while I consider our other options. The Heating and A/C supplier is laboring to redirect some of the vents in a way that will make the ventilation more even throughout the house. But the Heating and A/C professional is doing so in a way that won’t hurt the Heating and A/C device either.