Thank you all, rb1957, phamENG, retired13, and STrctPono, dik, JAE, and EDub24, for the fast and useful replies, which have given me a lot of information but also concerns. I tried to answer to all your questions below, but most likely some of my answers are inadequate due to lack of time to keep up with everybody. But thank you all very much anyway! And I am looking forward to continuing this thread.
1) I see that all agree that the joints between beams (runway and top support) should be considered as pinned and not fixed supports. I thought that four bolts would be enough to qualify as fixed, but after your explanations now I understand that, being those bolts so close one to the other, they provide little restriction to prevent the beam from deflecting. Three pinned supports (well, one pinned and two simple) would be easier for me as I used, 32 years ago, the Three Moment Theorem, during my only real encounter with beams.
2) rb1975, I could figure out what is MDM, Moment Distribution Method, which I briefly studied for a class assignment, 35 years ago, as Hardy Cross. But what is IMO?
3) phamENG and EDub24: the purpose of my analysis is to verify this system before initial use by us. Those six beams and six columns, plus the three motors and all accessories, were bought a couple of years ago from another company, where they were used as a gantry crane, so they were disassembled and stored by the company where I work. They were recently installed (and I was recently hired!). So, the structure was proved in the previous company, but we want to verify it, and of course to check the anchor bolts we are using, which are the same size as before because we have not modified the base plates, with the worst concrete resistance possible, 2,000 psi. This calculation of the anchor bolts is very fuzzy to me, I found a calculation in Engineers Edge website per ACI-318, it is a big formula, I am not afraid of its size, but I need to understand its different terms and we don’t have that ACI spec.
4) retired13 and JAE: The crane is rated for a live load of 6,000 lbs, but the crane catalog indicates 6,600 lbs. for the bridge beam, trolley, two end trucks, three motors, and 900 lbs for impact load, for a total of 12,600 lbs. to be supported by the runway beams.
5) STrctPono: I am sorry that, due to the angle where I took the picture, the beams seem as on a slope. They are horizontal.
6) STrctPono and JAE: Those columns were installed this year, while that building should be around 30 years old. They drilled holes in the floor and used 3/4" x 5-1/2” long anchors. As I said before, those columns, beams and motors were used by another company at another location.
7) I am attaching a picture of a top joint. The runway beam is spliced of two sections, one is 40 feet long and the other is 14 feet long. This picture shows the middle column and the splice plate, there are two plates like that one, one on each side of the web of the runway beam.
8) JAE, we could add those X braces between columns, but I would need to demonstrate their need with calculations, because this crane was used without them. And I was planning to calculate considering the worst structural steel grade, that is, A36, with 36,000 psi for yield strength.