Door

A door was an architectural feature blocking or allowing access to another space.

Hafsa helped Maimuna hide Barbara Wright from El Akir by keeping watch at the door. (TV: The Crusade)

The Doctor's TARDIS, as used by the First Doctor, had two doors, the outer door of the exterior entrance chamber, followed by the inner door which led to a fourth dimension, beginning with the control room. (COMIC: The Secrets of the Tardis) Following the Last Great Time War, the Doctor dispensed with the inner doors, the police box doors leading directly into the TARDIS control room. (TV: Rose)

After the Second Doctor disappeared from the TARDIS, Jamie and Zoe were startled to hear knocking on the TARDIS door, as they were travelling in the Vortex. (PROSE: Undercurrents)

Trying to kill the Third Doctor, attached a volataliser to a door at the Deep Space Research Centre No. 2, so that if anyone tried to open the door it would fall to the ground and destroy the building. The Doctor was able to act quickly enough to catch it before it detonated. (PROSE: Doctor Who and the Terror of the Autons)

The access code to open the door from the Chancellor's office to the President's office on Gallifrey was the spoken phrase "there's nothing more useless than a lock was a voice print", a popular saying of Borusa's, were spoken. (TV: The Invasion of Time)

The Fifth Doctor tapped into the antimatter storage system on Briggs' freighter and used it to stabilise the door just as a Cyberman breaks through, fusing it into the door. (TV: Earthshock)

When an intelligent Earth species reached the edge of the Solar System, they and their entire timeline were sucked through a door into Time's End. This happened to billions of species until it was stopped by the Sixth Doctor. (AUDIO: The Nowhere Place)

The Watcher was on duty at the door of a Vrill colony. The Seventh Doctor referred to him as a "butler-fly". (AUDIO: Survival of the Fittest)

A Tele-door was a teleport system that allowed an individual to travel vast spaces by merely walking through a door. (PROSE: The Tomorrow Windows)

When the War Doctor, Tenth Doctor and Eleventh Doctor were imprisoned in the Tower of London in the 16th century, none of them checked to see if the door was locked. (TV: The Day of the Doctor)

The Twelfth Doctor was trapped in the TARDIS when it shrank so much from the Boneless' influence that he could not fit through the door. (TV: Flatline) This same incarnation of the Doctor later remarked that it was impossible to form a bond with a door, as they were "notoriously cross" with their lives, such as they were, consisting of people "pushing past them". When in his confession dial, the Doctor was able to use his telepathy to convince a door to unlock for him. (TV: Heaven Sent)

The doors of a TARDIS could be opened and closed from their control consoles. (TV: An Unearthly Child, Journey to the Centre of the TARDIS, Hell Bent) When creating an echo of the primary console room, a TARDIS did not reproduce the door to exit the ship. (TV: Journey to the Centre of the TARDIS) If a lifeform registered as both inside and outside of a TARDIS simultaneously, the TARDIS doors would be unable to properly close and seal the real time envelope. (TV: The Husbands of River Song)

During the era of the Thal-Dalek battle, the doors of the Dalek City opened to approaching Daleks, (AUDIO: The Lights of Skaro) though the First Doctor and his companions managed to trick the doors into opening by waving their hands in front of the door sensors. (TV: The Daleks) The door leading to the city's incubation level could be opened by either pushing a hidden button in a specific corridor on Level 13 or from within the level itself. (AUDIO: Return to Skaro) During the Last Great Time War, the War Doctor learnt to trick Dalek doors by approaching them with confidence, tricking the system into thinking he was a Dalek. (PROSE: Engines of War)

C. S. met the Ninth Doctor by the door to the boiler room in the school after an explosion within. Smoke followed the Doctor after his exit. (PROSE: Have You Seen This Man?)