Personally, I'd allow a double door to be affected by a single wizard lock. If you think about a mechanical lock, a double door still only needs one lock rather than a lock for each door involved so I'd apply the same logic to the spell.
I know it's been a minute since you asked ...
But, I would treat them as a single door.
...
Just as it is a pair of pants, I would say that this is a pair of doors.
It's a single vestibule in a single frame. There's only a single lock in the middle holding them together.
I think that any DM that said it takes two is being a little overly pedantic. There's no reason that it would be ... once one door is open, that doorway is open. I might suggest that in a strict reading, the intent of "a door, a chest, or portal" is to make it clear that it's one opening that is being locked.
There is nothing in the description that would lead one to believe that it's for only a single object that resembles a flat, upright, or hinged mechanism, or that it even has to have a locking mechanism. It could just be a rock pile thrust into a cave opening, within given size parameters.
Because it's the portal being sealed magically, not the object closing it.
In my games, I tend to consider the one casting sufficient to lock double doors. Having said that, what makes this an interesting question is the fact that in the computer game, "Temple of Elemental Evil," double doors within the temple require TWO "Knock" spells to open both doors.
That's correct, if you wish to swing both doors wide open, it requires two "Knock" spells to do it. Clearly, someone at Wizards of the Coast is of a different opinion.
I would agree with the majority of people saying 1 spell for 1 portal (including double doors)
The only things I would add is I have played before every locking/restraining mechanism.
To explain that I have ran an adventure where a double door has had 2 lock on the door, 1 locking from left to right and the other locking from right to left, This I rulked would need 2 spells as there is 2 restraining effects
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