Air conditioning doesn’t reach our bedrooms

Our house isn’t really big, only around fifteen hundred square feet.

And it is fairly new and well-insulated.

Our boiler and central a/c do a good task of heating and cooling the house. There’s one small concern that I’ve noticed, but. If we close the doors of the three bedrooms, which are situated at the farthest distance from the heating and cooling units, those rooms don’t receive as much of the heat and/or cool air. My associate and I are empty nesters, however our pet is like having another child – mainly because we dote on him so much. If we leave him in the dwelling when we go away, we shut the bedroom doors to prevent him from jumping on the beds and getting his fur on the comforters. But when we arrive home, the bedrooms are significantly cooler in the winter and warmer in the summer time than the rest of the house. I remember when we had the dwelling built, the builder discussed that the sitement of the heating/cooling component in the basement would determine its efficiency in reaching each of the rooms of the house. My associate and I discussed the pros and cons of placing the units closer to the main residing part of the home. Bedrooms, he explained, are properly not as pressing, as ceiling fans in the summer time and blankets in the winter will compensate for any inefficiency. I now wonder if we let him talk us into a bad decision. I even called another Heating and Air Conditioning company to discuss the situation, then he explained that the ideal location of the boiler/a/c component is one where there is a supply of natural gas, an exhaust vent, and fresh air circulation. His explanation made much more sense than that of the original builder.
air quality systems