A phenomenological model describing the mechanical behavior of polycrystalline solids undergoing stress-induced phase transformations is presented in the setting of three-dimensional (3-D) media. The model, which is developed within the framework of Generalized Standard Materials, has been built on a few basic assumptions, namely an admissibility condition for thermodynamic forces and a locking constraint for phase transformations. The macroscopic kinematic consequences of stress-induced phase transformations are described by a tensor named transformation strain. Numerical integrations of the resulting set of equations show that many features of shape memory alloys obtained by certain authors for CuAlZnMn alloys under non-proportional loadings can be qualitatively described by the present model.