Thanks for the response.
The bells will be hung from a new carriage, a steel frame. This frame is a substructure within the building primary frame at the belfry level. The bells don't swing. They are struck with whackers put into motion manually by bell ringers. Some of these bells are big. One is about nine feet in diameter. The biggest bell is struck with a whacker that weighs over 800 pounds, so this provides some lateral force (probably not that large) that needs to be resolved in the carriage.
My first analysis of the primary frame of the tower is that it is very stiff. Wind deflects it a fraction of an inch. Seismic on the other hand from a static loading approach deflects the tower 8 inches. I haven't yet determined how much of that is from the mass of the bells.
I'm trying to sort out my design approach. The code does not require me to make this building designed for earthquake loading, but since we are buidling a new carriage, I want to take the opportunity to accomodate earthquake mitigation if it is economically viable.
I see the project ranging from building a new carriage ignoring earthquake loading (our state code permits this for existing old buildings), to a mitigation of seismic damage perhaps by isolating the base of the new carriage or adding dampers to knee bracing or a combination of both.
I think I first need to determine the dynamic deflections, velocity, and accleration of the belfry with and without the bell weight. This should give me an idea of the magnitude of displacements and relative contribution between the massive bells and the primary frame to displacements.
To get an image of this, the bell carriage would be about 24 feet square with a column at each corner. I may include a column in the middle to help spread the loading over the floor framing. I expect I might have two rings of girts. One at the tops of the bells say about ten feet up and another ring about 15 feet up. I can connect these two rings together and to the posts with knee and corner bracing for lateral stability. I'm thinking that dampers could be part of the bracing. If the improvement from decoupling shows promise, maybe I could add base isolation to the carriage.
Seismic isolation and damping a new problem area for me. Any insight is welcome.