Your polytope is the marginal polytope of the complete bipartite graph $K_{m,n}$ and almost a cut
polytope.  Let $G = (V,E)$ be an undirected graph. A cut is a bipartition of the vertex set into two sets. For each cut, an edge is either cut (its vertices are not in the same block of the partition), or not cut (its vertices are in the same block). The cut polytope has one vertex per cut.  We can also write a cut as a binary string and you see those (encoded in ${-1,1}$) as  the first three coordinates of your vertices.  For each cut, make a vector of length $|E|$ whose $E \ni e$ coordinate is $1$ if the edge is cut and $0$ if not.  The convex hull of the cut
   vectors is the cut polytope of G.

   You have two differences to the cut situation.  The first is that you are encoding indicators in
   $\{-1,1\}$ instead of $\{0,1\}$.  If you homogenize your polytope by adding a coordinate that is $1$ for
   each vertex, then a linear change of coordinates makes the polytopes the same.

   The second difference is that the vertices of the cut polytope do not have 'a copy of the cut' as its first $m+n$ coordinates. This can be
   rectified by considering instead of $G$, the cone over it.  The cone is a graph with an extra
   vertex that is connected to every vertex in $G$.

   This polytope appears also in algebraic statistics.  There it is called the marginal polytope of a
   graph model.  The construction is exactly like you describe it and your case is the complete
   bipartite graph.  The only difference is again that indicators with values in $\{0,1\}$ are used.
   In algebraic statistics people are interested in the generating degree of the toric ideal of this
   polytope.  For instance if $n=m=3$, then this degree is $6$:
   https://www.markov-bases.de/show.php?name=G175_bin. On this page, the "sufficient statistics
   matrix" has as its columns the vertices of your polytope, just with zeros and ones.

There are several hardness results about CUT polytopes, especially for the complete graph. A
textbook reference would be "The geometry of cuts and metric" by Michel Deza and Monique Laurent.
Googling brought up this paper on computational aspects of generating facets for cut polytopes of
other graphs: http://arxiv.org/pdf/math/0601375v2.pdf.