Austenitic stainless steels offer a suitable combination of high ductility, adequate toughness, considerable strain hardening and good fire resistance, making them excellent construction materials, especially for structures subjected to accidental loading such as seismic and/or fire events. With most of the research over the recent years devoted to the behaviour of single isolated stainless steel members, advances on structural systems are scarce, yet necessary, for the further development of design codes. Hence, an extensive experimental programme on EN 1.4301 austenitic stainless steel frames including tests at different structural levels -material, cross-section, member and frame levels- has been carried out at the Laboratory of Technology of Structures and Materials at Universitat Polite`cnica de Catalunya. The companion paper presents the tests carried out at cross-section and member level, and the knowledge gained from the planning of the experimental set-up for frame tests, including the adopted loading schemes, auxiliary elements and instrumentation. This paper presents the results of the four tests conducted on austenitic stainless steel frames under static vertical and horizontal loading. The analysis of the test results allowed to investigate the interaction of material and geometrical nonlinearities experimentally, as well as the assessment of the EN 1993-1-4 and EN 1993-1-1 provisions for the global analysis of stainless steel frames, where the influence of material nonlinearity on second order effects is evaluated, and which is currently limited to numerical studies only.