Kaido, sharkbite fittings are more for homeowners making a repair, not for doing entire homes. It'd be silly to do that. If you're going to replumb an entire house, it'd be foolish to worry about sleeving the pex indoors. Use a homerun system instead. I don't think I've ever heard of pex bursting - the only failures (that I've ever heard of, including online) are due to bad fittings or improper installation of fittings.
What a homerun system is: manifold for hot water and manifold for cold water at the source. Then, you run a separate pex line for every fixture in the house. So, if you have a dishwasher, you run a hot water line from the manifold to the sink. And you run a hot water line from the manifold to the dishwasher. NO tees. NO elbows. The only connections are at the manifold and at the fixture - it's one solid piece of pex in between. I can't figure out why people are so worried about elbows and tees inside of walls eventually failing. If you're using tees and elbows, you're completely missing the advantage of pex.
Yes, it does mean a lot more feet of pex. However, you save money by having fewer fittings. Pex runs around 1/3 the cost of copper. So, let's say you end up with 3 times the distance of copper pipes. You break even on that cost - but you save quite a bit on the lack of fittings. And, you save a lot more on time. And, you have more piece of mind.
And, for FSM's sake, just buy a $30-50 crimp tool, and 50 cent fittings, rather than $7 for every single fitting. Sell the crimp tool on ebay when you're done. (Or use the expansion method with the expansion sleeves; more expensive tool.)
If you have a line that freezes in extremely cold weather, the lack of fittings in the middle of the run means you're not likely to experience an extreme pressure build-up that's going to force the fitting off the pex. I doubt you're going to get pex to burst from a frozen line - it'll just stretch, then return to normal size when the ice is gone again. The same can't be said for CPVC or copper.